The opposition Labor Party is widely expected to win by a
landslide, replacing Prime Minister Rishi Sunak's Conservative
Party which has been in power for 14 years.
Refugees and immigrants from Commonwealth countries, mainly
former territories of the British Empire such as Nigeria, India,
and Malaysia, are eligible to vote in British elections.
Panjak, 27, who came to Britain in February last year, said he
was excited to cast his vote after missing the election in his
native India.
"In my country, they don't allow people from other countries to
vote ... I came here on a student visa, but they are giving us
an opportunity, like British citizens," said Panjak who works
part-time as an ambassador at his university in Manchester,
northwest England.
Teh Wen Sun, a 33-year-old Malaysian student from Salford, not
far from Manchester, said she did not see much difference
between the two main parties, but she was keen to vote for a
party that is more receptive to immigrants.
Immigration is an electoral battleground in Britain, with Sunak
promising to cut net migration levels if the Conservatives win,
amid concern from many British voters that it was too high and
put excessive pressure on the state-run National Health Service,
housing and education.
Sunak has since tightened visa rules and made international
headlines for a policy to send asylum seekers to Rwanda.
Oyinkansola Dirisu, 31, a support worker from Manchester who
came to Britain in 2022, said she was looking forward to voting
for Labor, and said she wanted whoever won power to make it
easier for people like her to move to Britain.
Others, like Esther Offem, 26, who came from Nigeria last
September, are still undecided: "None (of the parties) have done
much in the areas that I'm most interested in. But at the
moment, I would probably go for the Conservatives ... I'm not
sure yet."
(Writing by Suban Abdulla; Editing by Toby Chopra)
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